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Supporting Manufacturing in the South West The accountant’s view Ian Lloyd 17 th July 2013. Overview. MHA manufacturing Survey – Key Areas Capital expenditure Research & Development enhanced allowances Patent Box – the new regime. MHA National manufacturing Survey. Key areas include
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Supporting Manufacturing in the South West The accountant’s view Ian Lloyd 17th July 2013
Overview • MHA manufacturing Survey – Key Areas • Capital expenditure • Research & Development enhanced allowances • Patent Box – the new regime
MHA National manufacturing Survey Key areas include • Growth • Funding • Recruitment and skills • Currency and exchange rate management • The tax regime: • Capital expenditure management • Research & Development enhanced allowances • Patent Box
Capital expenditure management • Make sure you take advantage of all tax reliefs available for capital spend • Annual Investment Allowance is available to all businesses • Expenditure falling within the AIA is fully deductible from taxable profits • Currently £250,000 per annum for years ending 31 December 2013 and 2014 • Ensure capital spend is in the correct period for tax purposes
Research & development enhanced allowances Why are these important? • Additional tax deductions available for qualifying spend: • 125% uplift of spend for small and medium sized companies • 30% uplift for large companies • For example £100 of qualifying spend results in a tax deduction of £225 for small and medium sized companies and of £130 for large companies
Research & Development enhanced allowances How do you qualify? • The R&D Project must “seek to achieve an advance in overall knowledge or capability in a field of science or technology through the resolution of scientific or technological uncertainty” • Technological or scientific uncertainties exist where the knowledge to resolve them is not readily available or deducible by a competent professional • Must show a process of investigation and analysis that highlights the method adopted to overcome the uncertainties including successes and failures
Research & Development enhanced allowances • May be “hurdles” to overcome to fall within regime , for example HMRC queries • Once within regime, benefits are significant, for example £100,000 spend receives deduction of £225,000 for tax – this will save £25,000 in tax at 20% corporation tax rate • R&D enhanced allowances may be the difference between a project being viable or remaining on the drawing board • HMRC estimate there are £1bn of unclaimed R&D enhanced allowances annually………..so look closely at what you do
Patent Box • 10% effective rate of tax for exploitation of patents • Includes: • Sales of patented products • Sales of products that include a patented component • Licence fees for the exploitation of a patent • For example if a car has a patented windscreen wiper blade, arguably all of the profit from the sale of the car will be taxed at the reduced 10% rate – it really can be that generous!
Patent Box • Applies to all UK, EU and EEA patents • Regime operates from 1 April 2013 • Benefit phased in so receive 60% of benefit from 1 April 2013, rising to 100% by 1 April 2017 • If undertaken R&D on a product is it worth filing a patent? • Patent Box regime is a huge incentive to register and exploit patents within the UK
Conclusions • Plan capital spend to effectively utilise all available reliefs • R&D and Patent Box can alter the viability of projects and radically change a company’s tax profile • Examine carefully the projects you undertake, can all or some of the project qualify for R&D • If you have a proprietary product or process or are claiming R&D consider the benefits of trying to patent that process or product • If HMRC are expecting £1bn per annum of additional R&D claims, lets not disappoint them!